Abstract

1. Habituation of the lateral giant fibre escape response in the crayfish to repetitive tactile stimuli is believed to result from homosynaptic depression at the first synapse of the reflex, between tactile afferents and interneurones. Normally, habituation of escape responses to repeated innocuous stimuli is presumed to be adaptive. Experiments reported here were undertaken to determine whether habituation would occur under circumstances when it would presumably be maladaptive - in particular, when tactile receptors are stimulated by an animal's own tail-flip movements.2. Experiments were carried out on the crayfish isolated abdominal nerve cord, which contains the lateral giant reflex pathway.3. Compound e.p.s.p.s elicited in the lateral giant by electrical stimulation of tactile afferents decline by from 25 to 36% over a series of eleven trials at 1/5 sec (control series).4. To determine whether such a decline would occur when sensory afferents are stimulated during a ;tail-flip', stimuli were given as in the control series but each stimulus occurred 20 msec after direct electrical stimulation of a medial giant or lateral giant escape-command fibre at which time tail flexion movements of an intact animal would be in progress. Under these conditions% e.p.s.p. decline over 11 trials at 1/5 sec was only 16-45% of that occurring on the control series.5. This protective effect starts at about 10 msec after escape command neurone firing, is maximal at 20 msec, and thereafter declines, remaining weakly detectable at 100 msec. This time course is commensurate with that required for execution of a tail-flip movement. Thus, sensory afferent-to-lateral giant transmission is protected from depression if stimuli occur when a tail-flip movement is or should be occurring.6. Giant fibre spikes do not superimpose facilitation upon a depressed reflex pathway, nor accelerate rate of recovery from depression; rather, protection is attributable to actual prevention of development of the depressed state.7. Protection was also examined at the first synapse of the reflex, where the depression responsible for habituation is believed to occur, by recording intracellularly in the largest of the first-order interneurones (interneurone A) of the pathway. In absence of protection, ten stimuli presented at 1/4 sec caused a mean decline of 32% in the e.p.s.p. in interneurone A. When such stimuli followed directly evoked escape command neurone firing by 20 msec this decline was reduced by 59-100%.8. We suggest that protection serves to prevent crayfish from habituating to stimuli produced by their own tail-flip movements.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call